Golder v. Littlejohn

30 Wis. 344
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedJune 15, 1872
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 30 Wis. 344 (Golder v. Littlejohn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Golder v. Littlejohn, 30 Wis. 344 (Wis. 1872).

Opinion

LyoN, J.

This case has been before this court on a former occasion, on an appeal from the order of the circuit court sustaining a demurrer to the complaint. It was then held by this court that the complaint states facts sufficient to constitute a. cause of action. 23 Wis., 251. The allegations of the complaint are there sufficiently stated, and need not be repeated here. The questions decided upon that appeal must be considered as settled. Hence it is res adjudicaM, so far as this case is concerned, that the complaint states a cause of action, and that the action is properly brought by the administrator de bonis non, in the name of the county judge.

One condition of the bond upon which the action is predi[349]*349cated, is, that the principals therein shonld render a true and just account of their administration to the county court, or the judge thereof, within one year from the date of the bond, and at such other times as the court might require. No such account was ever rendered by the executor and executrix, or either of them. Their failure to do so is a breach of the condition of the bond, for which this action can be maintained.

It becomes, therefore, quite unnecessary to inquire whether other conditions of the bond have been broken also.

The action having been properly brought in its present form, and there having been a clear violation of one of the conditions of the bond, the judgment for the penalty named therein was properly rendered. Taylor’s Stats., 1653, § 20.

The important question in the case, is whether the judgment awards execution for the sum for which the defendant is legally liable by virtue of the conditions of the bond. This question involves an inquiry as to the correctness of the account of the executors, stated by the referee, and confirmed by the circuit court.

The referee charged the executors, or the executor Kellogg, with the amount of the inventory of personal property, being $1,340.50, the interest paid to Kellogg on the notes and land contract mentioned in the inventory, but which interest is not-included therein, $313.60, the railroad stock not inventoried $326, cash received for plow not inventoried, $2.50, and for old iron $1. Total $1,983.60. ,

He allowed the executor as follows:

For funeral expenses of testator.$128,00
Debts of the testator. 106 59
Expenses in county court.■ 12 65
For the support of Mrs. Potts during the settlement of the estate. 600 00 For services as executor. 100 00
$947 24

Leaving a balance against the executor of $1,036,36. To this sum the circuit court added simple interest at seven per cent. [350]*350from tbe death of Mrs. Potts, and awarded execution for the amount of such sum and interest.

The proofs show that Mrs. Potts used considerable more than $600, of the estate, for her support after the death of the testator, and the allowance of that sum, by the referee, was probably made upon the ground that she was only entitled to the income of the estate under the will. A computation will show that the interest on the yalue of the whole estate charged by the referee to the executor, from the time of the decease of the testator, to the decease of Mrs. Potts, amounts to nearly or quite $600. It further appears • that Mr. Kellogg sold the railroad stock for sixty dollars, which sum was, at the time of such sale, the full market value thereof, but that the stock afterwards, and for a short time, was worth in the market, the sum charged therefor in the account, to-wit — $326 and more.

In order to determine whether the referee and' the circuit court have stated this account upon correct principles, it is necessary to ascertain what were the legal rights of Mrs. Potts as a legatee under the will.

By the terms of the will, all of the property of the testator, real, personal and mixed, of every description whatever, which should remain after paying debts of the testator, funeral charges and expenses of administration, together with the rents, issues and profits thereof, was bequeathed to Mrs. Potts for life. The will then directed, that after her decease said property should be sold and the proceeds thereof distributed as therein directed, to the American Baptist Free Mission Society and to the grandchildren of the testator.

There is no ambiguity in these provisions of the will, and their effect is to give Mrs. Potts a life estate in the property, with remainder to the personal representatives of the testator, in trust, to sell the same after the decease of Mrs. Potts, and to pay over the proceeds thereof as directed in the will. Such was clearly the intent of the testator, and that intent, being consistent with the rules of law, must prevail. Smith v. Bell, 6 Peters, [351]*35168; Boyd v. Strahan, 36 Ill., 356; Bradley v. Wescott, 13 Ves., 445; Siegwald v. Siegwald, 37 Ill., 430.

The real estate of the testator was sold by the surviving executor, after the death of Mrs. Potts, and the proceeds thereof applied in accordance with the provisions of the will, and we have only to determine the duty and liability of the executors in respect to the personal property bequeathed to Mrs. Potts for life.

The general rule is, that where there is a bequest of the whole of the testator’s personal estate, or of the residue thereof after the payment of debts, expenses of administration and legacies, to one person for life, with the remainder to others after the termination of the life estate, the whole property must be converted into money, and invested in permanent securities, by the executor, and the income only paid to the legatee for life. But if it can be gathered from the will that the testator intended that such legatee for life should enjoy the property in its then condition, the bequest is specific, and the legatee is entitled to the possession and enjoyment of the property thus specifically bequeathed, although the bequest be made in general terms, and without any particular designation of the property. The authorities, both in England and this country, which assert this doctrine, are very numerous, and the law as here stated is well settled. Reference to a large number of these cases will be found in the notes to Howe v. The Earl of Dartmouth, (7 Ves., 137,) in 2 Leading Cases in Equity, 262. See also Healey v. Toppan, 45 N. H., 243, and cases cited; Morgan v. Moran, 14 Beavan, 72.

In the present case the will expressly gives to the legatee for life the use and enjoyment of the property, and, by directing that it be sold after her death, the testator evidently intended that it should not be sold before her death, but that she should have the possession and use of it during her life. It necessarily follows that in respect to the property which was of a character to be possessed, used, enjoyed and sold, that is, the per[352]*352sonal chattels as distinguished from the choses in action, the legacy is specific, and Mrs. Potts was entitled to the possession, use and enjoyment of such chattels in specie, during her life. This proposition is conceded to be correct in the brief of the counsel for the plaintiff.

Had Mr. Kellogg been sole executor, and had he delivered those chattels to Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
30 Wis. 344, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/golder-v-littlejohn-wis-1872.